4,024 research outputs found

    She Knows It

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/4041/thumbnail.jp

    Discrete Accidental Symmetry for a Particle in a Constant Magnetic Field on a Torus

    Full text link
    A classical particle in a constant magnetic field undergoes cyclotron motion on a circular orbit. At the quantum level, the fact that all classical orbits are closed gives rise to degeneracies in the spectrum. It is well-known that the spectrum of a charged particle in a constant magnetic field consists of infinitely degenerate Landau levels. Just as for the 1/r1/r and r2r^2 potentials, one thus expects some hidden accidental symmetry, in this case with infinite-dimensional representations. Indeed, the position of the center of the cyclotron circle plays the role of a Runge-Lenz vector. After identifying the corresponding accidental symmetry algebra, we re-analyze the system in a finite periodic volume. Interestingly, similar to the quantum mechanical breaking of CP invariance due to the θ\theta-vacuum angle in non-Abelian gauge theories, quantum effects due to two self-adjoint extension parameters θx\theta_x and θy\theta_y explicitly break the continuous translation invariance of the classical theory. This reduces the symmetry to a discrete magnetic translation group and leads to finite degeneracy. Similar to a particle moving on a cone, a particle in a constant magnetic field shows a very peculiar realization of accidental symmetry in quantum mechanics.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure

    A Pre-transplant Blood-based Lipid Signature for Prediction of Antibody-mediated Rejection in Kidney Transplant Patients

    Get PDF
    Purpose. The aim of this study is to demonstrate the potential of the pre-transplant lipidome to predict post-transplant antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) in kidney transplant patients. Methods. Patients were selected from a prospective observational cohort of a single-center adult kidney transplant center in the United States. The study included 16 kidney transplant patients who develop AMR within 2 years post-transplant and 29 stable control (SC) kidney transplant patients who did not develop AMR at any time within the post-transplant follow up. Selection of group differences on the day of transplant was determined by t-test analysis. Stepwise forward method was used to create Linear Discrimination Analysis with regularized correction (RLDA). Changes over time were estimated using sparse partial least square method which is validated by permutation testing. T-test was performed to compare two time points for the same group and groups at matched time points. JMP Pro 13 and MetaboAnalyst were used in the analysis of the Data. Results. A comparison of lipids classes on the day of transplant revealed PLs relative concentration differences between SC and AMR. Concentration of phosphatidylcholine (PC) was significantly diminished in AMR, while there was a trend for increased concentration of lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC). AMR group also showed significantly lower concentration of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), lysophosphatidylethanolamine (LPE), plasmanylethanolamine (PE-O), and plasmenylethanolamine (PE-P). Our data demonstrated that there are significant differences in the lipidome between SC and AMR on the day of transplant. The analysis identified 7 distinct lipids that discriminated between AMR and SC (AUC) =0.95 (95%CI=0.84- 0.98), R2=0.63 (95%CI=0.4-0.8). A sPLSDA analysis of the data revealed a statistically significant alteration in the lipid profile at 6 months post-transplant compared to the day of transplant. The analysis revealed a panel of 13 lipids that were found to differentiate the two groups at 6 month post-transplant . Further data analysis confirms the presence of a sustained lipid metabolic difference between SC and AMR over time that distinguish between the patients with favorable and non-favorable transplant outcomes. Conclusion. This study demonstrates the potential of the pre-transplant lipidome towards determining AMR in kidney transplant patients, raising the possibility of using this information in risk stratification of patients about to undergo transplant.https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/gradposters/1086/thumbnail.jp

    Treatment challenges associated with bone echinococcosis

    Get PDF
    Objectives In this literature review, we concentrate on epidemiology and therapy of osseous echinococcosis, with an emphasis on the recurrence risk. Methods Literature review 1930-2012. Results We retrieved 200 publications based upon single case reports or case series, mostly from resource-poor settings. Among the 721 rural patients (22% females; median age 37 years), 60% of all reported cases were from the Mediterranean region and almost all patients were immune competent. Echinococcus granulosus was identified as the most frequent species. Most infections involved a single bone (602/721; 83%) and often the spine (321 cases; 45%). In eight cases (8/702; 1%), a secondary bacterial surgical site infection was reported. Surgical intervention was performed in 702 cases (97%), with single intervention in 687 episodes (95%). Complete excision of the lesion was possible in only 117 episodes (16%). Albendazole was by far the most frequently used agent in monotherapy with various dosages, while mebendazole in monotherapy was less frequent (32 cases). The median duration of antihelminthic therapy was 6 months (range 0.7-144 months). There were 124 recurrences (17%) after a median delay of 2 years (range 0.4-17 years). In multivariate analysis, the presence of visceral organ involvement increased the odds of recurrence by 5.4 (95% CI 3.1-9.4), whereas the number of surgical interventions, the duration of antihelminthic therapy or the use of hypertonic saline did not influence recurrence. Conclusions Bone echinococcosis is a rare parasitic disease. While treatment modalities vary considerably, combined surgical and medical approaches are the standard of care with a 17% risk of recurrenc

    Improvement of the Staggered Fermion Operators

    Get PDF
    We present a complete and detailed derivation of the finite lattice spacing corrections to staggered fermion matrix elements. Expanding upon arguments of Sharpe, we explicitly implement the Symanzik improvement program demonstrating the absence of order aa terms in the Symanzik improved action. We propose a general program to improve fermion operators to remove O(a)O(a) corrections from their matrix elements, and demonstrate this program for the examples of matrix elements of fermion bilinears and BKB_K. We find the former does have O(a)O(a) corrections while the latter does not.Comment: 16 pages, latex, 1 figur

    Internet-based search of randomised trials relevant to mental health originating in the Arab world

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: The internet is becoming a widely used source of accessing medical research through various on-line databases. This instant access to information is of benefit to busy clinicians and service users around the world. The population of the Arab World is comparable to that of the United States, yet it is widely believed to have a greatly contrasting output of randomised controlled trials related to mental health. This study was designed to investigate the existence of such research in the Arab World and also to investigate the availability of this research on-line. METHODS: Survey of findings from three internet-based potential sources of randomised trials originating from the Arab world and relevant to mental health care. RESULTS: A manual search of an Arabic online current contents service identified 3 studies, MEDLINE, EMBASE, and PsycINFO searches identified only 1 study, and a manual search of a specifically indexed, study-based mental health database, PsiTri, revealed 27 trials. CONCLUSION: There genuinely seem to be few trials from the Arab world and accessing these on-line was problematic. Replication of some studies that guide psychiatric/psychological practice in the Arab world would seem prudent

    Financial development and economic growth in an oil-rich economy: The case of Saudi Arabia

    Get PDF
    © 2014 Elsevier B.V.We investigate the effect of financial development on economic growth in the context of Saudi Arabia, an oil-rich economy. In doing so, we distinguish between the effects of financial development on the oil and non-oil sectors of the economy. Using the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) Bounds test technique, we find that financial development has a positive impact on the growth of the non-oil sector. In contrast, its impact on the oil-sector growth and total GDP growth is either negative or insignificant. This suggests that the relationship between financial development and growth may be fundamentally different in resource-dominated economies
    corecore